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Chapter 7. Krátos

Chapter 7. The Quaestor and the *Prex Abstract Lat. quaero ‘seek, ask’ (whence quaestor, quaestus), a word without an etymology, has close connections with precor, *prex ‘to pray, prayer’ which must be pinned down: in fact it is not only in Latin that the two terms seem to form a redundant combination, as in the old formula “Mars pater, te precor quaesoque,” but in other languages too, derivatives from *prek–… Read more

Chapter 8. Royalty and Nobility

Chapter 8. The Oath in Greece Abstract The oath, a solemn declaration placed under the guarantee of a superhuman power that is charged with the punishment of perjury, has no Indo-European expression any more than the notion of “swearing” has. Different languages have coined expressions which relate to the particular forms assumed by the ordeal which the taking of an oath involves. Notably in Greek, thanks to the Homeric expression… Read more

Chapter 9. The King and His People

Book VI: Religion Chapter 1. The “Sacred” Abstract The study of the designation of the “sacred” confronts us with a strange linguistic situation: the absence of any specific term in common Indo-European on the one hand, and a two-fold designation in many languages (Iranian, Latin, and Greek) on the other. The investigation, by throwing light on the connotations of the historical terms, has the aim of clarifying the structure of… Read more

Book V: Law

Chapter 2. The Libation Abstract The liquid offering, such as is denoted in Greek by the verb spéndō, spéndomai and the noun spondḗ, is defined specifically as the “offering of security.” Every enterprise that involves a risk, such as a voyage, a warlike expedition, but also a pact or a peace treaty, is thus preceded by a spondḗ. The notion of an insurance against risk, of a guarantee, is also… Read more

Chapter 1. Thémis

Chapter 3. The Sacrifice Abstract The absence of any common term to designate the “sacrifice” is contrasted, in the separate languages and often within one and the same language, by a great diversity of expressions corresponding to the various forms which the sacrificial act may take: libation (Skt. juhoti, Gr. spéndō), a solemn verbal undertaking (Lat. voveo, Gr. eúkhomai), a sumptuous banquet (daps), fumigation (Gr. thúō), a rite of illumination… Read more

Chapter 2. Díkē

Chapter 4. The Vow Abstract The root of Gr. eúkhesthai, Latin voveo, recurs in Indo-Iranian. Latin voveo, votum means specifically “the vow,” while Iran. aog– and Skt. oh– means “to pronounce solemnly or with pride”; but Homeric eúkhesthai is usually translated either as “to pray” or “to boast.” This polysemy becomes less surprising if we assign to the root *weghw– the double meaning of “vow”: a thing solemnly vowed, an… Read more

Chapter 3. Ius and the Oath in Rome

Chapter 5. Prayer and Supplication Abstract Apart from *prek-, studied above, several terms meaning “to pray” have limited sets of correspondences within the Indo-European family. One dialect group consisting of Hittite, Slavic, Baltic, Armenian (and perhaps Germanic) present forms related to Hitt. maltāi– ‘to pray’; another group, Iranian-Celtic-Greek, all present terms made from the root *ghwedh– ‘to pray, desire’. Etymologists have been embarrassed by the divergence of sense between Greek… Read more

Chapter 4. *med- and the Concept of Measure

Chapter 6. The Latin Vocabulary of Signs and Omens Abstract Latin is remarkable for the abundance of terms which in literary usage are employed indifferently to denote the divine sign, the omen. But etymology enables us to restore the preliterary distinctions between omen ‘a veracious presage’. monstrum ‘a creature whose abnormality constitutes a warning’ (moneo ‘to warn’). ostentum ‘a phenomenon which extends (*ten-) opposite (obs-) the observer in his field… Read more

Chapter 10. Purchase and Redemption

Chapter 17. Gratuitousness and Gratefulness Abstract Lat. gratia is a term, originally having religious value, which was applied to a mode of economic behavior: what designated “grace” and an “action of grace” came to express the notion of “gratuitousness” (gratis). Text The terms relating to the various aspects of payment lead on to consideration of the opposite notion, namely that of “gratuitousness.” This is an economic as well as a… Read more

Chapter 11. An Occupation without a Name: Commerce

Book II: The Vocabulary of Kinship Introduction Abstract If our knowledge of the Indo-European vocabulary of kinship has not been noticeably advanced since the study of Indo-European kinship by Delbrück (1890), ethnological research, for its part, has made great progress, and this is what today provokes the linguist to revise the traditional interpretation of certain lexical “anomalies.” Text The terms relating to kinship are among the most stable and securely… Read more